Frank Rideau
Joined: 21/03/11
Posts: 186
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Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
#989876 - 27/05/12 04:25 PM
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Just wondering, you have a nice advanced mix going, most tracks are nicely processed and
balanced and you are not far from sending it to your favorite mastering facility. But then
you feel it would need a new guitar track, or you want to replace an existing one, is
there any advice on tracking inside a finished mix ? I ask this because I was thinking of
a risk to maybe over-gain the recording to compete with the strong mix while monitoring or
even be tempted to compressed at the recording stage or maybe I'm thinking too much, I
just have to make -add track and press record and try to mix the track correctly later
on.
This seems the icon of choice in many discussions here, so here we go
->
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore Revisiting Obscure Film Music
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adrian_k
Joined: 30/01/03
Posts: 1741
Loc: Gloucestershire
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#989881 - 27/05/12 04:46 PM
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Yeah I think you are thinking too much  Set up the
monitor feed so that the player hears what they need, forget about the main mix. Track
just like you would if you'd done it earlier in the process, then re-mix. Would be my
shout anyway. cheers A
-------------------- getting better all the time..
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James Perrett
Joined: 10/09/01
Posts: 9660
Loc: The wilds of Hampshire
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#989949 - 28/05/12 08:48 AM
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If you are tracking then the mix isn't finished... Having said that, it isn't
totally unknown to do overdubs at the mastering stage but I would generally want to remix
to make space for the new parts. James.
-------------------- JRP Music - Audio Mastering and Restoration.
http://www.jrpmusic.net
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4212
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#989959 - 28/05/12 09:20 AM
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Quote Frank Rideau:
Just
wondering, you have a nice advanced mix going, most tracks are nicely processed and
balanced and you are not far from sending it to your favorite mastering facility. But then
you feel it would need a new guitar track, or you want to replace an existing one, is
there any advice on tracking inside a finished mix ?
Meaningless question. If you're still tracking it isn't a
finished mix. Not even a started one, really.
(Let's try not to lose the
distinction between a "composition" a "performance" and a "mix".)
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Bossman
active member
Joined: 30/09/02
Posts: 1541
Loc: UK
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Exalted Wombat]
#990000 - 28/05/12 12:36 PM
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I've done a lot of mixes where, after having got the mix close to being finished, the
client turns up with a new guitar track (or new vocal tracks or something) to replace the
current one.
-------------------- www.Lozjackson.com
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Bossman
active member
Joined: 30/09/02
Posts: 1541
Loc: UK
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990001 - 28/05/12 12:41 PM
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Quote Frank Rideau:
...is there
any advice on tracking inside a finished mix ?
yes (assuming the mix is setup with a sensible headroom
margin), I would adjust the input gain so that the new track is roughly the right level
balance with the rest of the mix and try and adjust mic positioning, guitar/amp tone etc
to fit the mix - then hopefully it will just slot straight into the mix without needing
much in the way of EQ/volume adjustments.
-------------------- www.Lozjackson.com
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18399
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990002 - 28/05/12 12:50 PM
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Quote Frank Rideau:
... is there
any advice on tracking inside a finished mix ?
As others have said, it isn't yet a finished mix because you have
decided it needs more!
You don't have to undo any of the basic work you've
already done, before tracking -- just overdub the new guitar part while listening to the
existing 'rough mix' just as you usually would. You can then process the new track as
required and blend it into the mix just as you would any other track. You'll probably need
to revisit some of your existing tracks and their processing to make spectral space for
the new part, of course.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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Bossman
active member
Joined: 30/09/02
Posts: 1541
Loc: UK
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Exalted Wombat]
#990003 - 28/05/12 12:51 PM
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Quote Exalted Wombat:
Quote Frank Rideau:
Just
wondering, you have a nice advanced mix going, most tracks are nicely processed and
balanced and you are not far from sending it to your favorite mastering facility. But then
you feel it would need a new guitar track, or you want to replace an existing one, is
there any advice on tracking inside a finished mix ?
Meaningless question. If you're still tracking it isn't a
finished mix. Not even a started one, really.
(Let's try not to lose the
distinction between a "composition" a "performance" and a "mix".)
meaningless answer!!!... wheres the
advice?
Normally tracking *should* be finished before starting a mix, but this
isn't always the case.
-------------------- www.Lozjackson.com
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Jack Ruston
Joined: 21/12/05
Posts: 4066
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990005 - 28/05/12 01:04 PM
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This happens all the time. Artists come up with a new idea, a part they start doing live
while the project is ongoing, and they want to incorporate it. I find the main
thing to watch for is that your overall system latency can get quite large once you have a
lot of plug ins running, and routing into and out of each other etc etc. If you also
involve analogue then then that latency increases further with the required conversions.
Now it all depends how your software works, and what settings are on or off, where you
monitor the overdub from, if you're mixing on a desk or summing mixer etc...But you need
to be sure that your overdub is going in the right place. Personally I always print the
mix, make sure it's aligned with the tracking (which it might not be if you're using a
desk) and then do the overdub to that printed file with everything else turned off. J
-------------------- www.jackruston.com
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4212
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Bossman]
#990028 - 28/05/12 02:15 PM
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Quote Bossman:
meaningless
answer!!!... wheres the advice?
Normally tracking *should* be finished before
starting a mix, but this isn't always the case.
And if you add a track it may just slot in, you may need to
rethink the mix to a greater or lesser extent. What answer do you WANT to hear?
You added a track because the mix lacked something. Something fairly basic - a
whole track!
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Frank Rideau
Joined: 21/03/11
Posts: 186
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990075 - 28/05/12 05:29 PM
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Ok, please let's dont have a fixation on the word "finished", we all agree it's not if you
have to add a new track, just a bad formulation on my side.
So that's why i'm
asking an advice to work out a new track over the "not-finished" mix. But I hear some of
yours, thanks.
Exalted : you seems to take my situation as some kind of
paradox ? Would you suggest to start the mix from scratch because of the need of a new
track ? I'm not talking theory.
Cheers.
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore Revisiting Obscure Film Music
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Frank Rideau
Joined: 21/03/11
Posts: 186
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990078 - 28/05/12 05:37 PM
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Quote:
Personally I
always print the mix, make sure it's aligned with the tracking (which it might not be if
you're using a desk) and then do the overdub to that printed file with everything else
turned off.
Nice
one, thanks.
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore Revisiting Obscure Film Music
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4212
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990088 - 28/05/12 06:59 PM
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Quote Frank Rideau:
Exalted : you
seems to take my situation as some kind of paradox ? Would you suggest to start the mix
from scratch because of the need of a new track ? I'm not talking theory.
Like I said. Maybe. There's no blanket
answer. If the new track fits in easily, good. If it doesn't, do what it take to MAKE it
fit in.
If you're playing the music, a lot of the "fitting in" can be by using
musician skills - listening hard, choosing to play appropriate notes using an appropriate
sound. If you're sequencing, a more mechanical approach may be needed.
If
you're filling an obvious hole in the music there may be little extra mixing needed. If
you're working a "layer upon layer" style you may have to work harder.
There
you are - lots more words. But I'm not sure they add anything to "maybe" :-)
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Urthlupe
member
Joined: 20/09/02
Posts: 379
Loc: West Midlands, UK
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990128 - 29/05/12 06:21 AM
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Trying to avoid the semantic discussion which seems to have broken out above....
Jack's right on the money for me. When your mix is a stretch down the line already you
will most likely have a fairly hefty latency going on due to mix plugins - a particularly
significant problem if you wish to overdub new virtual instrument parts, or 'playthrough'
midi, and will need to be addressed. Your software will provide some method of removing
this latency, usually by temporarily disabling processing that requires compensation. This
may be the quickest solution but might make it impossible to correctly judge your overdub
where the nature of the track is profoundly affected by the removal of processing.
A second solution is to make an attempt to 'freeze' the worst culprits, be they
processors or instruments; long-winded, and in some DAWs difficult to achieve where the
processing occurs on a bus.
For the best solution, see Jack's post.
Loopy
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Frank Rideau
Joined: 21/03/11
Posts: 186
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990216 - 29/05/12 01:24 PM
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I was thinking of exporting the mix into stems (with all the processing), load this
into a new project and make the overdub in that project, then bring back the new track
into the mix project. The multiple stems will allow me to rebalance things to taste if
necessary for the recording and I will not have to bother with CPU, Ram and latency.
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/orgasmo-sonore Revisiting Obscure Film Music
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Jack Ruston
Joined: 21/12/05
Posts: 4066
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990226 - 29/05/12 01:41 PM
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Just depends on whether it's really worth the effort to stem it out. It's sometimes useful
to have the main reference point for the track on its own stem. Eg if it's a harmony
vocal, stem the main vocal. Whatever you do keep it simple. You don't want to find
yourself resisting the process because it's a pain. That's the wrong reason to reject the
idea of trying something. J
-------------------- www.jackruston.com
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4212
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990377 - 30/05/12 11:10 AM
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Quote Frank Rideau:
I was
thinking of exporting the mix into stems (with all the processing), load this into a new
project and make the overdub in that project, then bring back the new track into the mix
project. The multiple stems will allow me to rebalance things to taste if necessary for
the recording and I will not have to bother with CPU, Ram and latency.
This is getting so complicated! If
there's really a latency issue affecting synch when you record the new track, just switch
out those FX while tracking.
Is this a real problem, or are you inventing a
theoretical one? :-)
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Wease
Joined: 17/07/03
Posts: 1986
Loc: Sunny Walsall
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Frank Rideau]
#990471 - 30/05/12 04:50 PM
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i sometimes mix to stems then record something- especially if i want to use a kaoss-pad on
the whole drum track etc etc. I'll also add a guitar sometimes - usually a
booster/tone exiter/pan thingy underneath the main guitars - especially if i want a 'real
feel' (which is more often than not!) guitar part - rather than multing a pre recorded
part. - and i didn't know i wanted it till i've started mixing...which is often! There is no hard and fast rules - I just try to get the sound right at source so I'm not
destroying a mix, just adding ....and sometimes recording a sound you know you
want is just easier without any plugin's running...this is not so important (and therefore
probably not needed - so you could record straight into your mix in a low latency mode)
when recording a single sound, but becomes important when you want to use something like a
kaoss-pad over pre-effected material- where you want the plugin effects all singing and
dancing, but the latency issues affect your 'playing' of the kaoss-pad. just me
2p worth really - i would just record the guitar peice - if you don't then like it - don't
use it!
-------------------- http://soundcloud.com/seaapes
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Urthlupe
member
Joined: 20/09/02
Posts: 379
Loc: West Midlands, UK
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Exalted Wombat]
#990480 - 30/05/12 05:57 PM
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Quote Exalted Wombat:
Is
this a real problem, or are you inventing a theoretical one? :-)
Just a problem which is obviously outside
your experience..... 
Loopy
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Exalted Wombat
Joined: 06/02/10
Posts: 4212
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Re: Overdub a new track in an advanced mix
[Re: Urthlupe]
#990628 - 31/05/12 01:33 PM
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Quote Urthlupe:
Quote Exalted Wombat:
Is
this a real problem, or are you inventing a theoretical one? :-)
Just a problem which is obviously outside
your experience..... 
Loopy
Possibly. IS there
a synch. problem? Are we talking about an actual current project or a hypothetical one?
It's much easier to address concrete issues (well, actually, it's easier to waffle away
theoretically, but you don't get so far :-)
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